Toronto power bills may shock residents
Electricity costs could soar by 20 per cent
as hydro companies focus on profits.
Globe
And Mail
Thursday, January 10, 2002 Print Edition, Page A9
By Wallace Immen
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Consumers in Toronto are being warned to expect a shock
in their electricity bills this year.
Residents will pay as much as 20 per cent more for their
power when new bills start arriving this spring, the environmental think
tank Energy Probe warned yesterday.
And those who signed contracts with private suppliers
that promised savings to those who "lock in" the price they
pay for power, may actually see their bills rise by between 35 and 40
per cent, said the group's executive director Tom Adams.
Toronto Hydro, the local power distributor, will not make
its new charges public until it submits them for regulatory review later
this month, said Blair Peberdy, the company's vice-president.
"We are trying to minimize the impact on consumers,"
he said. He added that 20 per cent sounds high, but he would not estimate
the increase because the company is still working out its request to the
Ontario Energy Board.
However, based on preliminary information, the city of
Toronto's chief administrative officer Shirley Hoy said in her budget
presentation yesterday that the city should expect to see its hydro costs
rise 15 per cent.
The changes are part of a provincial restructuring to
privatize power distribution that was approved in 1999. Hydro companies
have to increase their prices because they now must act as profit-making
businesses rather than public services.
Mr. Peberdy said the biggest single increase on the bills
this year will be to cover corporate taxes that the power companies must
make to the province. However, along with other changes that Mr. Adams
calls "institutionally created confusion," all hydro customers
are destined to be stunned when they see the new bills that will begin
arriving after the new rates go into effect in March.
Customers who signed contracts with independent suppliers
to lock in their rates will find that they are actually locked into higher
electricity costs that will substantially raise their bills.
"The Ontario Energy Board approved misleading wording
on the current bill," Mr. Adams said, because it doesn't separate
the actual hydro rate from the other costs of delivering the power.
Hydro bills now indicate that Toronto Hydro customers
pay an energy rate of 6.5 cents per kilowatt hour.
That was the price the four companies who contract for
bulk supplies of power highlighted to get homeowners to sign long-term
contracts to buy power from them at between 5.6 and 5.95 cents per kilowatt
hour.
But the actual charges for electricity are 4.2 to 4.5
cents an hour -- costs that have been frozen by the province, Mr. Adams
said.
The remainder of the energy rate on existing bills covers
other expenses that in the spring will be broken out as separate items,
Mr. Adams said.
Some of those items will increase in price, in addition
to the new payments covering corporate taxes, when the changes take effect
in March. However, Toronto Hydro customers will pay the increases on the
4.2 to 4.5 cents while those who locked in will have them added to the
higher contract rate.
"These consumers are soon to realize they were misled,"
Mr. Adams said.
Starting this spring in Toronto, the bills will be broken
out into a number of separate charges reflecting the costs of privatizing
the former provincial utility Ontario Hydro. The prices on some of these
items will go up at the same time.
Along with the actual price of the electricity, customers
will see how much they will pay as a distribution cost, which includes
a fixed price for being hooked up to the system and variable fee reflecting
the volume of electricity used.
Also itemized will be a transmission fee, which reflects
the cost of getting the power from the generating station to the power
grids.
This fee is paid to the privatized firm Hydro One that
controls the high-voltage power lines that feed local distribution utilities.
Many of the local distribution companies, including Toronto
Hydro, are still owned by municipalities, while others have been bought
by Hydro One.
The new bills will also include a debt-reduction fee designed
to pay off more than $20-billion in debts on the books of the former Ontario
Hydro. Most of the debts are related to nuclear power plants, Mr. Adams
said.
A final item on the bills will be something called dispatch
fees, a charge for covering costs of keeping the system secure.
The local distribution companies in Ontario are on different
schedules for restructuring, so the price increases and the date they
will appear on bills in municipalities other than Toronto will vary.
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